Jax Cassidy
CW: The work that follows invokes a world ending scenario brought about by a missile assault from the air.
Go careful. choose your time.
Unresolved
10.
EMERGENCY. NUCLEAR MISSLE INCOMING. TEN MINUTES UNTIL IMPACT. SEEK SHELTER NOW. THIS IS NOT A DRILL. The alert message is accompanied by the long, repeating vibration and blaring alarm from every single cell phone. Not long after, the air-raid sirens went off. Are still going off. Across the country, everyone reacts differently. Screams. Sobs. Silence.
9.
I am taking shelter in a Walgreen’s bathroom. The last moments of my life, of all our lives, and here I am, pissing. I don’t bother washing my hands. “Let it Snow,” the Michael Bublé version, is still playing through the overhead speakers. There’s someone else in here, too. An employee, stuck spending her final moments cleaning the toilets. She’s crying. On the phone with her mother. Exchanging goodbyes and I love yous. Now they are praying together. Dear God. Grant me the serenity. I hadn’t even thought about making any final calls. That probably makes me a bad son. Though we haven’t talked in over a year, I call my mother.
8.
My mother doesn’t answer the phone. The employee is now wiping the bathroom mirror. Tears fall from her cheeks into the porcelain sink.
“You know there’s no point, right?” I say. “You don’t need to clean that anymore.”
She turns to look at me. If the nuke wasn’t about to kill me, her glare would. “I know I don’t. But it’s something to do. Something to think about other than…”
She cannot finish her sentence. I don’t push any further.
I try dialing my mother again. It rings and rings and rings again. Then to voicemail.
“How long do we have left?” the employee asks.
“I’m not sure.” I don’t want to check the time.
“How fast do missiles travel?”
“I’m not sure.”
She restocks the toilet paper rolls.
7.
I try to remember all of my lasts. Last meal. Last movie I watched, or book I read. Last photo I took. Last time I had sex. Last dog I pet. I’ve collected my answers.
Salad, because of course I chose now to start being healthier.
Home Alone. A holiday tradition.
The Handmaid’s Tale, by Margaret Atwood, for a Feminist Lit course I took in college.
A flower. It turned out blurry.
Unsure.
A Chocolate Labrador named Ransom, who I met outside of my apartment building.